some exceptional insight, especially about conditioning calm, post triggering the excitement so they learn the come down from their heightened response. That being said, with respect; "Netflix and chill" does not mean what you think it means . . .
This lady hits the nail on the head! She is clear, concise, and an excellent presenter. Will watch more of her training videos! I'm desperate with my hyper poodle, who I realize needs me to learn how to teach him.
💕💕💕 Thank you, Karen! This playlist is full of help for you: ruclips.net/video/06CyHsE-bEY/видео.html&pp=gAQBiAQB (you can skip the first video as it's this same one). Happy training!
I am so glad this popped up today - my 11 week old had a total freak out last night and I have no idea what triggered it. I had never seen him so manic!! He calmed down and actually slept all night, so I know that he was overwhelmed with adrenaline!
"..What you have is a super-excited dog who is still super excited, but they're very fit so they can be excited for longer.." Rofl. My Vizsla to a tee.
Susan is putting the power to save a dog from ending up back in the pound into the frustrated guardian hands!! ty❤ this is amazing. I recently adopted a Basenji/Indian Pariah mix from St Thomas through local rescue and cannot have friends or family over yet. a little fearful! but with patience/understanding there is a way to reach her.
This is the first trainer that finally has something I can use with my reactive dog. Thank you for this understanding, and how to do something about it.
A wise man once told me, “I asked you what time it was and you told me how to make a clock.” You might want to split your video into two parts: The causes of hyperactivity in dogs, and How to improve that behavior. In particular, I found it very frustrating spending time learning what NOT to do to help my dog. Practical help is golden, and I think that most people stopping here are more interested in how to fix the problem than the history of it. Thank you for your dedication and concern.
Hilarious. Had this video playing while giving my 1 year old Doberman a shower and showering myself. He runs out, doesn’t come when calling and runs throughout the house soaking wet. Up on bed etc. Clearly confirmation I do NOT have the respect I thought I had!! 😂. Great videos. Thanks so much.
There are no words that can describe how I’m grateful for the knowledge that Susan is sharing with us. I have a year old golden retriever puppy, who can easily get overexcited and starts nipping, stops listening, sometimes he’s humping on my leg. Usually what I would do is to ask him to go to his crate, and wait for him to settle down. Now i know that it’s not a solution that helps him enjoying his life or teaching him to relax. Thank you for that! I’d like to share recent events that made me to end the relationship I’ve had with my boarding place. I don’t use it often, only when I had to travel abroad and couldn’t take him with me. The boarding place is operated by a couple who says that they know how to train dogs and makes them obedient. But when I learnt that they were spraying my puppy with water every time he misbehaved I was truly upset. It even caused a huge deterioration from improvement I did with my vet behaviourist in very mild case of resource guarding (they were aware of the protocol for resource guarding that we were working on). So they would spray water on him whenever they wanted to take a toy from him when he either stiffened or started growling. I thought I did enough research to find a best place possible, they accepted only 3 dogs at a time. There is a lesson for me, to always asks more questions regarding approach to the training to anyone his taking care of your dog. I was away for a week and already can see a negative impact on my pups behaviour. I wish I could find someone with a half amount of empathy that Susan has.
Terrific clip. Thank you Susan. Your explanations of creating a thoughtful dog that also has drive is logical. A great reminder to calm myself when I am getting frustrated or cross. It isn't Eps fault I am a beginner with sharing effective please be calm cues. I appreciate the handler skill building you share. 💞🐾
Thank you Susan for sharing all of your games, stories, wisdom, insight… I am a dog 4H leader and just today, I made a batch of “sardine specials” which I shared with the kids in my club. We worked with our dogs for a bit (the treats were very popular) then made homemade Valentines for senior citizens in our community. Your values mesh so well with ours - make the world a better place. My puppy, Trygve, and I are learning so much from Home School the Dog. I am trying to pass on as much knowledge as I can to these 4H families and am constantly recommending your videos, podcasts and blog to every dog person I know! Thank you, thank you. ❤️
When adopted as a 2 yo, my dog literally ricocheted off furniture and the walls --- round and round and round. She was capable of chasing a Chuck-it ball for two hours in and out of frigid water. Wish I'd had this podcast then! Gaining confidence and having simple go to behaviors (Collar grab, HT) helped. 🍪🍪🍪🍪🍪
OMG. You are a true sage. These are the most breed relevant videos I have found EVAH! My perfectly awesome, young, high-drive, ADHD purebred Irish Setter and I thank you deeply. I am so excited about this video that I am taking a deep breath and quietly releasing the dopamine without any external signs. It is not only information, it is a corroboration of my unexperienced gut instincts with her. We will get there with her training and NO I have no interest in turning her into a lap animal, either.
My dog too was over socialized. I thought I was supposed to introduce him to everyone and every dog. So yes, Max is a social butterfly 🦋 who wants to greet EVERYONE. So now we have a few special dogs he can play with and a few people who can give him pats and scratches. So good to hear this, this will be helpful!!! I’m going to be so calm 😌 🤞 😬
That's so awesome, we're glad you found us! Susan did a podcast on becoming a dog trainer, in case you haven't watched it, here's the link for you: ruclips.net/video/2h7DqVILt00/видео.html The interviews with Emily Larlham and Laurie C. Williams also include awesome advice, they are episodes #212 and #213. Happy training!
This is so helpful. I rehomed my puppy with a neighbor when I developed mobility issues but now he gets hyper excited when he sees me. I realize I’m the trigger! I get so excited when I see him that he responds in kind and the neighbor finds him impossible to control. We both want to handle the situation in the best way for the poor dog. Now we have some guidance on how to do that. Thanks so much.
How are you not blowing up YT with your info?!?! What you’re teaching is so great and immediately applicable for even a novice like me! Wow! Thank you! You’re a gift to our furry four-legged babies.
Thank you for this. I am near tears at what to do with my toy Aussie doodle. He’s nine months old and absolutely turns himself inside out around other dogs and I just feel like I have failed him. I really appreciate you making this available.
I feel the same way with our pup. I had him bark at a dog because he wanted to play. We were at a bar so he was on lead. The owner of the other dog stood still and told me to control my pup. He then walked by and stopped a bit further to tell me to go get him training. We do training every week. He has been with us for 2 months (he is 8 months) and is a rescue. I cried because the guy was intimidating and I felt I wasn't good enough for my pup. We do everything we can. Because we care about our dog, we watch this video. Any bulky aggressive adult man who wants to intimidate a woman should really train himself in respectful behaviour.
Thanks for this awesome video. I especially liked the reference to herding breeds "freezing up" when over aroused. My old girl got like that every time we saw a rabbit. We would laugh and say "Bunny Alert!" Eventually, if I said that first before she froze up, she would be focused on me more than the bunny, and acknowleding the source of excitement made our bond closer.
Yesterday when I was talking with a workman about coming while I was away for the day, I told him, my dog, a 60 pound puppy, could knock you over with enthusiasm, so the strategy is, Don't look at him. If he jumps, turn your back. Don't talk to him or hold out your hand to him. When I came home, the work man was working away, unmolested. Of course, when I opened my car door, the dog jumped in, onto my lap, but that is another matter. The 'no speak, no eye contact' thing worked with a friend the other day also. I will be watching these vids - looking forward to it!
3:52 what you’ve explained so far is something I feel every day, and it’s really sad that dogs also have those feelings because it sucks not being able to respond or even think while in that state. I’m thinking maybe I can grab a few ideas that I might use them on myself and on my dog if it seems like they work for my dog? I’m glad that RUclips is recommending your videos to me again.
I loved the misbehaving.... or the normal dog or the way the normal dogs are when i was a child. Now i am a mother and i want my dog to listen to me. I feel bad that i want him to to be like human. Our dog is well behaved however he is excited when guests arrive. He is loving wants to play. He is English Cocker spaniel and i love him
One of the best protection dog trainers I've met used the phrase "stress innoculation" when teaching dogs that, yes, some things in life might freak you out somewhat, but it doesn't have to cripple you and your owners. Exposing dogs to real life and maintaining YOUR cool, confident leadership develops the dog's trust in you and builds their self esteem. There's an entire world outside of a fenced area that many people don't feel capable of bringing their dogs into due to reactivity issues (shelters are full of these dogs). I commend anyone watching this video and seeking to find true assistance. Leave the e-collars to the professionals (these devices DO have a place in the correct hands), and realize that, many times, it is not the dog, but YOU and how you interact (or not) with your animal that will make all the difference.
I attended a personal resilience course today, and it was amazing to see how much of Susan’s approach to life is coming to the workplace 😀 I shared your thoughts and process… possibly to often, but I am hopeful that the tutor and several of the delegates will come on over to see for themselves all the wonderful resources you share. The folks with dogs, will be getting a follow up from me next week to see if they have visited and if not, I will probably just pop a you tube podcast on to show them. Thank you for an amazing resource… I never expected to take it to work with me, but now I have you will be featuring quite often. I am a health, safety and well being trainer.
Thanks for this, your videos are great! Tip 8 will come in handy when I have to habituate my pup to my dance practicing, in my small condo :) Also, "one of you must remain calm at all times" is my new mantra.
Our new dog is only around 6 months old and she’s still a puppy, found a stray. Of course she has that insane puppy energy. Her foster home was also fostering older dogs that likely couldn’t handle her energy and easily got overstimulated by her hyper puppy nature. She likes to bite and jump, so we normally turn our backs when she jumps, but if she’s biting we tend to grab a bone for her or her squeaky toy. She’s a mutt, bull terrier is one of the breeds that is likely one, but she also has the same shape as a short hair border collie like our previous dog, but she also has that separation anxiety.
I’m so happy I stumbled upon this video! Our 11-month-old pittie/collie mix whom we adopted 5 months ago has become increasingly reactive to one of our senior cats, as well as increasingly excited when playing with our kitten, Maximus. So far, the cats are still segregated in the downstairs while Brownie is upstairs. The few times they’ve tried to come up, he has chased and frightened them. You’re given me great ideas as to how I can begin to calm him down by enticing the cats to hang out on the landing where he can see them from a safe distance and I can do the collar grab so he can begin to make a positive association. I’m going to be watching this video over and over again. Thank you!
So glad I found you and your channel. We've been doing pretty well with training and all, but your guidance and teachings will make it so much better! Thank you, thank you, thank you ❣️❣️
I love this podcast, it is amazing. I am extremely grateful to you for sharing all your knowledge and experience you have through your podcasts. Thank you.
Sounds like I have to take my adopted 8 maybe 10 year old back to basics! I am her 4th owner and dont want to give up! She has had enough of bad owners.
My Aussie mix is high energy but new- phobic. I got him during Covid and did early training on my own. I have a rescue border collie who is still high energy but well behaved. They are great together but soooo much energy. This is very helpful. Now that we are going out these tips will help me do a better job.
Thank you for this video. Your description of Tater Salad being over-socialized sounds exactly like my 10-month-old husky, Odin. He doesn’t have a mean bone in his body, but he is VERY excited to greet other dogs. Being 70 pounds and looking a little like a wolf, that doesn’t always go over so well. I can’t wait to try the techniques you talk about in this video 😊
When you described the bulldog who is over socialized- that is exactly the problem I’ve been having with my dog but didn’t have a word to put to it. I work in dog daycare and she goes to work with me 4 days a week and went from a dog that walked perfectly on lead to a dog that gets over excited to greet every dog she sees. Not an aggressive bone in her body but she wants to play the minute she sees another dog 😅
Thank you so much for this. I have a high drive Sheltie who is doing great in Agility so far still need alot of work ...well I need a lot of work. But I felt horrible at this one facility because my dog was barking during the run and the facility manager said I needed to leave because my dog was too loud. He loves agility and runs and talks. I know he's excited but they wanted to stop it...idk to me that didn't seem right. He barking at me because of me he wants me to give direction faster I'm struggling... not him. Thank God we found a place that understands this and his sheltie nature.
🥹 I'm so excited. I've been googling and asking people for 4 years what I could do to work with my extremely over stimulated dog. I can't take him on a walk without him pacing the house the rest of the day/next few days. He can't potty if he sees any movement at all. The amount of times I have to take him out and in til he can go is crazy. Hurricane season potty breaks are scary. I can't let him off leash even in a fenced area, or he runs nonstop for literal hours. And then he can't sleep that night, he's so wired. I've got a long day of taking notes and gathering videos tomorrow!
Hi, so glad this is helpful for you and your dog! There's a full playlist with videos to help: ruclips.net/video/06CyHsE-bEY/видео.html&pp=gAQB Please, let us know and you go with them!
I have a Canadian golden retriever. When she gets excited she zones out and it's hard to get her attention. She will sit and stay and can heel but the slightest thing, another dog or person, and she tears away from me. She is extraordinarily strong. She is all muscle. I've spent some time on the sidewalk face down..I'll try this. I just want to keep her safe and not scare people with her enthusiasm or embarrass me. She loves everything.
I just came across your channel searching for tools to help dogs with higher energy and anxiety. I’m currently enrolled in Animal Behavior College studying to become a dog trainer and your page is a breath of fresh air. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. Much love from San Diego.
I have a 1 year old border collie mix terrier and he gets over aroused panting for no reason at all at times ,and your right experience has calm him down your speaking the truth I tried every thing corrections doesn't works he's mind is gone the only problem I'm having is when he sees other dogs on walks he bully them over wants to say hi to every dog he sees he won't bark unless the other dog bark at him he's only been socialize a couple of times because he's to much
Have a Beagle who loses his mind when he see other dogs. The noise he makes about it effectively shuts out any attempt of mine to try to correct or calm him. I also have a small mix I adopted who is very excitable and I believe she has been conditioned to react with mindless excitement (like when she wants out) because it gets her what she wants fastest. I am trying to ask her to calm, sit, before the door opens. She can think if she wants to, and that’s the response I am going for.
Hi Elizabeth, you are you the right path with your dog 💕. We have a full playlist with help fo reactivity, here's the link for you: ruclips.net/video/qsHK--RoRjs/видео.html&pp=gAQBiAQB
I brought my GSP to a trainer in Flagstaff that had good reviews, and she assured me she had worked with sporting dogs before. She claimed my dog was fear-based (she's not) when my GSP jumped and went low to the ground because she threw a ball into her venetian blinds. I threw the ball into the blinds 2 more times, and she went to the ball without hesitation. Then the trainer said she needed to be trained after she was sedated, and be sedated for life. I thanked her for her time, then walked out knowing I'd never be back. Instead of sedating my dog, I started her on short (2-3 minute) sessions all through the day, teaching her to focus on me, with treats and toys. Within 2 weeks it was like I had another dog. She listened, focused, and calmed down... then I released her to have zoomie time and burn off energy. Sedate my healthy GSP? NOT going to happen. Thank you for all your tips, they were a sanity saver! 😊
I have had around 15 dogs maybe more and I have always trained them for fun through trial and error. Now I have a year old doberman/ cattle dog rescue named Luffy that is the smartest dog I have ever owned and can learn any trick in 2sec. Get him on a leash and walk him around and he is a lunatic. When my kids are home he is a lunatic lol Even after 2mo he is not much better. He was not properly socialized with dogs or people so he barks a lot. Also he has the herd dog mentality. He can sit and focus on me sometimes but I can see the energy wanting to explode. This video is for him 😄
I love this video. We definitely need to work harder on helping out dog greet more politely. I will be rewatching this video so many times. I can’t ignore that “Netflix and chill” does not mean what you think it means 😋
Loved this! To describe Tater Salad is to describe Ollie (my french bulldog) who also had a previous owner who had him at daycare and let him go in dog parks. Absolutely no aggression but RUDE and sending all the wrong messages. As I live alone in the country we don't naturally get the kind of exposure to dogs that we need so I drive 30 minutes (one way) to a small city where there is a terrific park with lots of space to work at a distance with really good owners who keep their dogs on leash. However, he is excited from the get go and especially when he sees a dog. When we're walking our country road, the woods & fields, we are clearly together and in synch and it is such a joy. But in an environment with dogs his excitement just escalates and he is hardly aware of me at all - he goes into drive! After a year of working on this I am getting so discouraged with my inability to manage this.
I wish I knew this with my dog earlier with m excuse. He gets over aroused guickly. Everyone gave the advice you talked about. This made him worse. Love your videos recallers,crate. Games. This information is helpful. You always give valuable information that works.
Get up early and take your dog for exercise, an hour, and a half. Take your dog again in the evening, use open spaces and take a couple of toys for the dog to fetch. Your dog will quieten down and you will feel fitter.
My dog is like that. She is calm when walking on the routes which she get used to. But when I take her to the new environments, she is excited and distracted by everything.
I have a rescue Lab/Staffy that sometimes acts like an "overly aroused" dog.. She might spin in circles, and she jumps on people when our company arrives. I was thinking that she was spinning as a way of "acting out" for not getting her way on a walk.. But your description now makes a LOT of sense to me. There are times my rescue lunges, spins and VERY occasional (when she had not has enough sleep and rest) may nip .I have found that if she goes into spinning mode I can stop our walk, caress her physically and talk to her gently and softly I can usually calm her down enough to continue our walk.Lunging at strangers is also an issue in the past and mainly when she gets "startled" suddenly by a loud vehicle racing by us on our walk, a fast biker or fast jogging dog. This was a very inciteful and helpful video for me Thank you!.
I have a couple of dog sisters, and one is bossy and excitable. They both wrestle and play and often get along well. They also often break into fights. The excitable one usually starts them, but not always. Anyways, I've noticed that if I get after the excitable one when she's on top in a fight, either to pull her off, or maybe spray water on her trying to break up the fight, it just gets her more crazy and makes it worse. I'm finding better ways to handle (and prevent) their fights, but that was an eye opener for me to see that.
Our dog is unlike any dog we've ever had or known. She is a blend of 4 kinds of shepherds...one being an Australian . Scout is a little over 6 1/2 yrs. old. We live on a busy street. Seems like she should be used to traffic & people walking by our house after living here all of her life (except first 8 weeks). People walk by our house every single day. She will bark because she hears someone walking by. She'll bark because cars/trucks are stopped in front of our house because traffic is backed up because of a train. If UPS, FED EX, Amazon makes a delivery , she barks. When I stand up to see about the delivery, the barking gets more frenzied along w/bouncing & moving around quickly. We can't keep her away from triggers. She over-reacts just because I come downstairs or just because I stand up. We take her w/us in the car often. She's great in the car! She's quiet. But when we arrive home, she over-reacts.She barks & runs around. What calms her down is to have her go in our living room & I close the gate which we have separating it from the dining room. This lets us do whatever we need to do upon arriving home w/out a dog under our feet, barking. Scout has a very sweet nature, not a mean bone in her body. And she is smart! I love her dearly. I love her enthusiasm. The barking, tho, is especially a problem because my husband suffers from misophonia which is triggered by Scout's bark !
Hi Pat, thank you for wanting to help Scout. Here's are two resources for you to consider with these challenges in mind to turn things around. The first is our playlist on creating calm - ruclips.net/p/PLphRRSxcMHy3KQXSC-3IzEdBgBetrl2YP We also have a video to help you with everything that she is reacting to outside - ruclips.net/video/62V-3JsHKvE/видео.html
I wish I found this vid sooner. Our 3 year old doggo gets over-excited super easily & it's a behaviour I've never dealt with before. It's been hard to find resources that really address the ins & outs of the associated behaviours & what to do about it
Susan you're amazing! thats story of my life these days with my 10 month old adolescent beagle. she's calm as a clam most of the time but when outside in unfamiliar places it has been difficult... i wish you can come to Switzerland to help me with my dog! 😆
Its never the dogs fault unless there is a sickness. There is no bad dog or bad child. Its on the parent and owner to learn the correct techniques and apply them assertively
I LOVE your videos and the simple way you explain things. So fun, encouraging and helpfull! Really, the best dog-training videos on RUclips. Thank you so much for what are you doing!
You make sense. I made a mistake of not fully training my first dog I ever owned before I brought her brother home when she was 1 yrs old. On top of that whopper, these are my first dogs ever and I am 55yrs old! BIG mistake. Mistake #3: I live way out in the country, so my dogs are not socialized so when the see another human, I don't exist, LoL! I trained them to do all kinds of fun tricks, but when I take them to town (rarely) they lose it, but I know it's my fault. I recognized their behavior is my fault before seeing this video. I started removing them from the people and new stimulus far enough that they can see it, but I was the leader again. They weren't perfect when I took them in where the commotion is, but so much more relaxed and comfortable with it. Work in progress, but I don't go in town a lot and the neighbors are getting redundant. They say hiya and go on to their business of sitting on me. (Golden Retrievers)
Thank you Susan. Again, my experience with my 2,9 Belgian shepherd reinforces the truth in your instructions… I take him to run in the woods, he runs for 1,5 hours and when we come back he is still over excited with the dogs neighbours…. Does not listen to commands… does whatever he wants…. I am tired!
Super Great! A lot of people don't get it. Sometimes I don't. My BC is so different from my one before him. This one is soooo dominating. But ultimately, it comes down to a connection between him and I. He is 2 1/2. He was so crazy I couldn't even get an eye contact for his first year. So I did nothing. Once I got eye contact, we started a relationship. Maybe that is wrong but we got things going on now. He is so smart, he knows what I'm asking for. I know what he is asking for. The basic commands are pretty funny at this point. We know where we are. A look at each other and we both know what's up. Also, he is only 2 1/2 and we are a year behind. And I do still get bit when he doesn't like something. Ya, cuz ya know, he is very dominant. SUPER ALPHA. But thank you for not just putting a breed in a box. And I'm good with the Alpha, cuz his feelings matter. And I hate whimsy ankle biters! 😂😂
2:51 3:21 over aroused dog 4:55 over calmed dog 11:14 too many carbs 12:27 over socialised 14:41 people pleaser stress 16:04 training owners 18:27 to 19:14 where we start
I love this! Thank you! ❤.. I need to work on more of those calm collar grabs!….. just so you know.. “Netflix and chill” does NOT mean relax😅, you may want to look that up before using that as the calming scenario.. to many, it’s a very arousing situation ;)
Minus the herding breed, she described my 11yr mini labradoodle. He would send shrill waves throughout the neighborhood when we'd go for walks. Recently, he came down with diabetes his voice isn't the same. 😢
Funny how I totally expected my Greyhound puppy to lean towards fearfull, timid and low-drive/energy, so I watched a bunch of video's to prepare myself for that before he came home. Only to now binge all video's on over-arousal, high-drive and reactivity because the puppy turned out to be over confident, highly play driven and quickly aroused! 😁❤
The good news is you can work on either of those and help your pup ❤️ Here's a playlist with resources for you: ruclips.net/video/06CyHsE-bEY/видео.html&pp=gAQBiAQB
Herding dogs need a job. I found if my Aussie puppy has to be on a leash he is much much calmer on a walk if he has a purpose. I have him on a long line (50ft) and we do nose work, parkour, swimming or throwing a chuckit stick which we can also play tug with. I practice recall and other obedience as well. It all seems to all gel together and he is having fun. When he is in his zone he does not pay any attention to other dogs or people. When we get home we both feel satisfied, relaxed and happy. It has take 4 months and a lot of diligent work to get to this point - he is 6 months now. We still have long journey but there is light at the end of the tunnel. All of my other 15 dogs in 35 years have been so easy going that i had never even heard of over arousal in dogs until my Aussie. If we are at the dog park I do obedience and chuck kibble for him to focus on. We know almost all the people and dogs in my small community dog park so he sees them everyday they are used to playing so it is not a novelty. If he does get too excited playing with the other dogs I take him to the dog beach and when he sinks into the water, I can almost hear a whoosh as he relaxes. I have plastic pool in the backyard for all the dogs but he is the only one that just likes to relax in it. I feel it is his version of a hot tub. I am getting him used our spa tub for winter and he loves the bubbles. I love the idea of massage do you have any videos for that? He has chosen the brick fireplace hearth as his go to place and all the dogs get a beef cheek in their respective chosen places after a big play. I get a coffee and just enjoy the peace.
@wendy4ronpaul, OMG! You should see the looks I get when I tell people there's not that much of a difference between training a child or an animal. 😱😛🐾🐾🐕 💖🙌😺
@@debracisneroshhp2827 THERE IS A DIFFERENCE. Babies don't bark, they don't breed, babies don't have periods. And babies are not ANIMALS. You're disgusting. I don't trust nuts, gives me Hitler vibes 😂😂😂 disgusting 🤢🤢
Susan, this episode (and the few before it) seems to be tailored made to help with our newest rescue dog, Tundra, who's been with us for two months now. The best thing with these podcasts, is my wife will actually watch them and pick things up. She's had no interest in Recallers with Boris (my other dog), but is seeing how it can help Tundra along with these podcast episodes, and is learning the games now as well. Tundra is a 17-month old, poorly socialized and very reactive puppy who spent six months in a shelter before we rescued her. Given a chance to calm down, Tundra is a very affectionate and gentle dog. She made friends with our other dog, Boris, very quickly, and is picking up her Recallers training rapidly. Your timing to release these latest episodes is perfect. The reactive dog playlist of episodes you've assembled have already been very useful, and these latest new ones are just adding to information I need for Tundra's training plan. She gets very over-aroused around moving cars, strangers, and unfamiliar dogs. Those are her primary triggers, and they're very hard to avoid where we live! People and cars are coming along slowly, but other dogs is going to need a lot of "Netflix and Chill" time (when the weather gets better, and key behaviors are more solid). Tundra is already solid with a head halter, and is better at IYC than Boris already.
Thank you, my dog was in a kennel without 50 l. I mean, dogs everywhere, mama's everywhere. And they were but in any way trained. I believe he is over excited because of this over socialized. As you say, I will try some other things now, thank you.
Download your copy of our Tasty Treats Recipes eBook:
dogsthat.com/tastytreats/
Get this, make these!!!!
Thanks! ❤️
Episode 110 ?
❤❤❤❤❤😂🎉🎉🎉
some exceptional insight, especially about conditioning calm, post triggering the excitement so they learn the come down from their heightened response. That being said, with respect; "Netflix and chill" does not mean what you think it means . . .
I love that... "You can't train emotions. You can condition emotions."
This lady hits the nail on the head! She is clear, concise, and an excellent presenter. Will watch more of her training videos! I'm desperate with my hyper poodle, who I realize needs me to learn how to teach him.
💕💕💕 Thank you, Karen! This playlist is full of help for you: ruclips.net/video/06CyHsE-bEY/видео.html&pp=gAQBiAQB (you can skip the first video as it's this same one). Happy training!
I am so glad this popped up today - my 11 week old had a total freak out last night and I have no idea what triggered it. I had never seen him so manic!! He calmed down and actually slept all night, so I know that he was overwhelmed with adrenaline!
How’s your seven month (?) old puppy doing now? Update pls 🙋🏼♀️
"..What you have is a super-excited dog who is still super excited, but they're very fit so they can be excited for longer.." Rofl. My Vizsla to a tee.
Susan is putting the power to save a dog from ending up back in the pound into the frustrated guardian hands!! ty❤ this is amazing. I recently adopted a Basenji/Indian Pariah mix from St Thomas through local rescue and cannot have friends or family over yet. a little fearful! but with patience/understanding there is a way to reach her.
Susan is one of the finest positive trainers out there .
💕💕💕💕💕💕
This is the first trainer that finally has something I can use with my reactive dog. Thank you for this understanding, and how to do something about it.
I keep telling her To calm soqn and she wants to bee good
Nice
A wise man once told me, “I asked you what time it was and you told me how to make a clock.” You might want to split your video into two parts: The causes of hyperactivity in dogs, and How to improve that behavior. In particular, I found it very frustrating spending time learning what NOT to do to help my dog. Practical help is golden, and I think that most people stopping here are more interested in how to fix the problem than the history of it.
Thank you for your dedication and concern.
Yes. Caesar makes it about being calm yet assertive ar the right times.
Hilarious. Had this video playing while giving my 1 year old Doberman a shower and showering myself. He runs out, doesn’t come when calling and runs throughout the house soaking wet. Up on bed etc. Clearly confirmation I do NOT have the respect I thought I had!! 😂. Great videos. Thanks so much.
😂😂😂😂😂
There are no words that can describe how I’m grateful for the knowledge that Susan is sharing with us. I have a year old golden retriever puppy, who can easily get overexcited and starts nipping, stops listening, sometimes he’s humping on my leg. Usually what I would do is to ask him to go to his crate, and wait for him to settle down. Now i know that it’s not a solution that helps him enjoying his life or teaching him to relax. Thank you for that!
I’d like to share recent events that made me to end the relationship I’ve had with my boarding place. I don’t use it often, only when I had to travel abroad and couldn’t take him with me. The boarding place is operated by a couple who says that they know how to train dogs and makes them obedient. But when I learnt that they were spraying my puppy with water every time he misbehaved I was truly upset. It even caused a huge deterioration from improvement I did with my vet behaviourist in very mild case of resource guarding (they were aware of the protocol for resource guarding that we were working on). So they would spray water on him whenever they wanted to take a toy from him when he either stiffened or started growling. I thought I did enough research to find a best place possible, they accepted only 3 dogs at a time. There is a lesson for me, to always asks more questions regarding approach to the training to anyone his taking care of your dog. I was away for a week and already can see a negative impact on my pups behaviour. I wish I could find someone with a half amount of empathy that Susan has.
This is the most helpful training video. Thank you!🙌🏼You explain things so well!
Were glad it was helpful! ❤️🐾
Terrific clip. Thank you Susan.
Your explanations of creating a thoughtful dog that also has drive is logical.
A great reminder to calm myself when I am getting frustrated or cross. It isn't Eps fault I am a beginner with sharing effective please be calm cues.
I appreciate the handler skill building you share.
💞🐾
Thank you Susan for sharing all of your games, stories, wisdom, insight… I am a dog 4H leader and just today, I made a batch of “sardine specials” which I shared with the kids in my club. We worked with our dogs for a bit (the treats were very popular) then made homemade Valentines for senior citizens in our community. Your values mesh so well with ours - make the world a better place. My puppy, Trygve, and I are learning so much from Home School the Dog. I am trying to pass on as much knowledge as I can to these 4H families and am constantly recommending your videos, podcasts and blog to every dog person I know! Thank you, thank you. ❤️
When adopted as a 2 yo, my dog literally ricocheted off furniture and the walls --- round and round and round. She was capable of chasing a Chuck-it ball for two hours in and out of frigid water. Wish I'd had this podcast then! Gaining confidence and having simple go to behaviors (Collar grab, HT) helped. 🍪🍪🍪🍪🍪
“Let that freak flag fly …”. These videos are fantastic, she’s so helpful and practical.
OMG. You are a true sage. These are the most breed relevant videos I have found EVAH! My perfectly awesome, young, high-drive, ADHD purebred Irish Setter and I thank you deeply. I am so excited about this video that I am taking a deep breath and quietly releasing the dopamine without any external signs. It is not only information, it is a corroboration of my unexperienced gut instincts with her. We will get there with her training and NO I have no interest in turning her into a lap animal, either.
Thank you, we're so glad to know you find it helpful. Happy training!
My dog too was over socialized.
I thought I was supposed to introduce him to everyone and every dog. So yes, Max is a social butterfly 🦋 who wants to greet EVERYONE. So now we have a few special dogs he can play with and a few people who can give him pats and scratches. So good to hear this, this will be helpful!!!
I’m going to be so calm 😌 🤞 😬
Love that I found this! As a beginning dog trainer I'm seeing more and more we need to accept out dogs for who they are more! ❤❤❤❤❤
That's so awesome, we're glad you found us! Susan did a podcast on becoming a dog trainer, in case you haven't watched it, here's the link for you: ruclips.net/video/2h7DqVILt00/видео.html
The interviews with Emily Larlham and Laurie C. Williams also include awesome advice, they are episodes #212 and #213.
Happy training!
This is so helpful. I rehomed my puppy with a neighbor when I developed mobility issues but now he gets hyper excited when he sees me. I realize I’m the trigger! I get so excited when I see him that he responds in kind and the neighbor finds him impossible to control. We both want to handle the situation in the best way for the poor dog. Now we have some guidance on how to do that. Thanks so much.
How are you not blowing up YT with your info?!?! What you’re teaching is so great and immediately applicable for even a novice like me! Wow! Thank you! You’re a gift to our furry four-legged babies.
Rodger, thank you for such a wonderful note and for tuning in!
Thank you for this. I am near tears at what to do with my toy Aussie doodle. He’s nine months old and absolutely turns himself inside out around other dogs and I just feel like I have failed him. I really appreciate you making this available.
Hi, you can do this! Here's a full playlist with more help: ruclips.net/video/qsHK--RoRjs/видео.html
I feel the same way with our pup. I had him bark at a dog because he wanted to play. We were at a bar so he was on lead. The owner of the other dog stood still and told me to control my pup. He then walked by and stopped a bit further to tell me to go get him training. We do training every week. He has been with us for 2 months (he is 8 months) and is a rescue. I cried because the guy was intimidating and I felt I wasn't good enough for my pup. We do everything we can. Because we care about our dog, we watch this video. Any bulky aggressive adult man who wants to intimidate a woman should really train himself in respectful behaviour.
@@IDK-pb3zt Yes, you're absolutely correct in what you said!!
A toy Aussie doodle? Maybe that’s the problem right there. 😮
A toy Aussie doodle sounds cute as can be! Just love and enjoy him - you will learn in time how to deal with him. @@Amy-dw7ii
Thanks for this awesome video. I especially liked the reference to herding breeds "freezing up" when over aroused. My old girl got like that every time we saw a rabbit. We would laugh and say "Bunny Alert!" Eventually, if I said that first before she froze up, she would be focused on me more than the bunny, and acknowleding the source of excitement made our bond closer.
Yesterday when I was talking with a workman about coming while I was away for the day, I told him, my dog, a 60 pound puppy, could knock you over with enthusiasm, so the strategy is, Don't look at him. If he jumps, turn your back. Don't talk to him or hold out your hand to him. When I came home, the work man was working away, unmolested. Of course, when I opened my car door, the dog jumped in, onto my lap, but that is another matter. The 'no speak, no eye contact' thing worked with a friend the other day also. I will be watching these vids - looking forward to it!
We love that you're finding Susan's podcast helpful, thanks for leaving a note ❤️
3:52 what you’ve explained so far is something I feel every day, and it’s really sad that dogs also have those feelings because it sucks not being able to respond or even think while in that state. I’m thinking maybe I can grab a few ideas that I might use them on myself and on my dog if it seems like they work for my dog? I’m glad that RUclips is recommending your videos to me again.
I loved the misbehaving.... or the normal dog or the way the normal dogs are when i was a child. Now i am a mother and i want my dog to listen to me. I feel bad that i want him to to be like human. Our dog is well behaved however he is excited when guests arrive. He is loving wants to play. He is English Cocker spaniel and i love him
One of the best protection dog trainers I've met used the phrase "stress innoculation" when teaching dogs that, yes, some things in life might freak you out somewhat, but it doesn't have to cripple you and your owners. Exposing dogs to real life and maintaining YOUR cool, confident leadership develops the dog's trust in you and builds their self esteem. There's an entire world outside of a fenced area that many people don't feel capable of bringing their dogs into due to reactivity issues (shelters are full of these dogs). I commend anyone watching this video and seeking to find true assistance. Leave the e-collars to the professionals (these devices DO have a place in the correct hands), and realize that, many times, it is not the dog, but YOU and how you interact (or not) with your animal that will make all the difference.
Just love your energy....❤
I attended a personal resilience course today, and it was amazing to see how much of Susan’s approach to life is coming to the workplace 😀
I shared your thoughts and process… possibly to often, but I am hopeful that the tutor and several of the delegates will come on over to see for themselves all the wonderful resources you share.
The folks with dogs, will be getting a follow up from me next week to see if they have visited and if not, I will probably just pop a you tube podcast on to show them.
Thank you for an amazing resource… I never expected to take it to work with me, but now I have you will be featuring quite often.
I am a health, safety and well being trainer.
Terri, thank you for such a lovely note! You are doing awesome things 💙
Thanks for this, your videos are great! Tip 8 will come in handy when I have to habituate my pup to my dance practicing, in my small condo :) Also, "one of you must remain calm at all times" is my new mantra.
Thank you, Lynda! It's an awesome mantra to have ❤️
Our new dog is only around 6 months old and she’s still a puppy, found a stray. Of course she has that insane puppy energy. Her foster home was also fostering older dogs that likely couldn’t handle her energy and easily got overstimulated by her hyper puppy nature. She likes to bite and jump, so we normally turn our backs when she jumps, but if she’s biting we tend to grab a bone for her or her squeaky toy. She’s a mutt, bull terrier is one of the breeds that is likely one, but she also has the same shape as a short hair border collie like our previous dog, but she also has that separation anxiety.
I’m so happy I stumbled upon this video! Our 11-month-old pittie/collie mix whom we adopted 5 months ago has become increasingly reactive to one of our senior cats, as well as increasingly excited when playing with our kitten, Maximus. So far, the cats are still segregated in the downstairs while Brownie is upstairs. The few times they’ve tried to come up, he has chased and frightened them. You’re given me great ideas as to how I can begin to calm him down by enticing the cats to hang out on the landing where he can see them from a safe distance and I can do the collar grab so he can begin to make a positive association. I’m going to be watching this video over and over again. Thank you!
Hi Marg, we're so happy to read this! Here's a playlist with many other resources for you: ruclips.net/video/qsHK--RoRjs/видео.html&pp=gAQBiAQB
So glad I found you and your channel. We've been doing pretty well with training and all, but your guidance and teachings will make it so much better! Thank you, thank you, thank you ❣️❣️
I love this podcast, it is amazing. I am extremely grateful to you for sharing all your knowledge and experience you have through your podcasts. Thank you.
Sounds like I have to take my adopted 8 maybe 10 year old back to basics! I am her 4th owner and dont want to give up! She has had enough of bad owners.
Thank you.
My Aussie mix is high energy but new- phobic. I got him during Covid and did early training on my own. I have a rescue border collie who is still high energy but well behaved. They are great together but soooo much energy. This is very helpful. Now that we are going out these tips will help me do a better job.
Thank you for this video. Your description of Tater Salad being over-socialized sounds exactly like my 10-month-old husky, Odin. He doesn’t have a mean bone in his body, but he is VERY excited to greet other dogs. Being 70 pounds and looking a little like a wolf, that doesn’t always go over so well. I can’t wait to try the techniques you talk about in this video 😊
Same have this over excited greeting problem.
Got a Gsd just the same he's 7 months old and already Beastly 🤣
No
9
Discard is
My dog is the same. 60lbs. Very friendly but crazy excited to play
When you described the bulldog who is over socialized- that is exactly the problem I’ve been having with my dog but didn’t have a word to put to it. I work in dog daycare and she goes to work with me 4 days a week and went from a dog that walked perfectly on lead to a dog that gets over excited to greet every dog she sees. Not an aggressive bone in her body but she wants to play the minute she sees another dog 😅
I love building drive and control as a behaviour around corners. It's one of the best ways I found with my own dogs to build the hot zone!
Your comments re dogs helps so much with kids than you know, esp high drive, high energy kids with a desire to be praised... Bless you❤
Thank you so much for this. I have a high drive Sheltie who is doing great in Agility so far still need alot of work ...well I need a lot of work. But I felt horrible at this one facility because my dog was barking during the run and the facility manager said I needed to leave because my dog was too loud. He loves agility and runs and talks. I know he's excited but they wanted to stop it...idk to me that didn't seem right. He barking at me because of me he wants me to give direction faster I'm struggling... not him. Thank God we found a place that understands this and his sheltie nature.
I love her. So knowledgeable and funny!
Thank you
🥹 I'm so excited. I've been googling and asking people for 4 years what I could do to work with my extremely over stimulated dog. I can't take him on a walk without him pacing the house the rest of the day/next few days. He can't potty if he sees any movement at all. The amount of times I have to take him out and in til he can go is crazy. Hurricane season potty breaks are scary. I can't let him off leash even in a fenced area, or he runs nonstop for literal hours. And then he can't sleep that night, he's so wired. I've got a long day of taking notes and gathering videos tomorrow!
Hi, so glad this is helpful for you and your dog! There's a full playlist with videos to help: ruclips.net/video/06CyHsE-bEY/видео.html&pp=gAQB
Please, let us know and you go with them!
I have a Canadian golden retriever. When she gets excited she zones out and it's hard to get her attention. She will sit and stay and can heel but the slightest thing, another dog or person, and she tears away from me. She is extraordinarily strong. She is all muscle. I've spent some time on the sidewalk face down..I'll try this. I just want to keep her safe and not scare people with her enthusiasm or embarrass me. She loves everything.
I just came across your channel searching for tools to help dogs with higher energy and anxiety. I’m currently enrolled in Animal Behavior College studying to become a dog trainer and your page is a breath of fresh air. Thank you for sharing your knowledge. Much love from San Diego.
Thank you, Eric, and welcome to our community!
I have a 1 year old border collie mix terrier and he gets over aroused panting for no reason at all at times ,and your right experience has calm him down your speaking the truth I tried every thing corrections doesn't works he's mind is gone the only problem I'm having is when he sees other dogs on walks he bully them over wants to say hi to every dog he sees he won't bark unless the other dog bark at him he's only been socialize a couple of times because he's to much
Have a Beagle who loses his mind when he see other dogs. The noise he makes about it effectively shuts out any attempt of mine to try to correct or calm him. I also have a small mix I adopted who is very excitable and I believe she has been conditioned to react with mindless excitement (like when she wants out) because it gets her what she wants fastest. I am trying to ask her to calm, sit, before the door opens. She can think if she wants to, and that’s the response I am going for.
Hi Elizabeth, you are you the right path with your dog 💕. We have a full playlist with help fo reactivity, here's the link for you: ruclips.net/video/qsHK--RoRjs/видео.html&pp=gAQBiAQB
I brought my GSP to a trainer in Flagstaff that had good reviews, and she assured me she had worked with sporting dogs before. She claimed my dog was fear-based (she's not) when my GSP jumped and went low to the ground because she threw a ball into her venetian blinds. I threw the ball into the blinds 2 more times, and she went to the ball without hesitation. Then the trainer said she needed to be trained after she was sedated, and be sedated for life. I thanked her for her time, then walked out knowing I'd never be back. Instead of sedating my dog, I started her on short (2-3 minute) sessions all through the day, teaching her to focus on me, with treats and toys. Within 2 weeks it was like I had another dog. She listened, focused, and calmed down... then I released her to have zoomie time and burn off energy. Sedate my healthy GSP? NOT going to happen. Thank you for all your tips, they were a sanity saver! 😊
I have had around 15 dogs maybe more and I have always trained them for fun through trial and error. Now I have a year old doberman/ cattle dog rescue named Luffy that is the smartest dog I have ever owned and can learn any trick in 2sec. Get him on a leash and walk him around and he is a lunatic. When my kids are home he is a lunatic lol Even after 2mo he is not much better. He was not properly socialized with dogs or people so he barks a lot. Also he has the herd dog mentality. He can sit and focus on me sometimes but I can see the energy wanting to explode. This video is for him 😄
Thank you. Great suggestions. ❤❤as mom of a four month old Staffie!!I hate that I get so frustrated with her but will take your great advice.
I love this video. We definitely need to work harder on helping out dog greet more politely. I will be rewatching this video so many times. I can’t ignore that “Netflix and chill” does not mean what you think it means 😋
Thank you so much that you are sharing your thougts and knowledg. Thank you thank you thank you
Ty. So much. We need this.
Loved this! To describe Tater Salad is to describe Ollie (my french bulldog) who also had a previous owner who had him at daycare and let him go in dog parks. Absolutely no aggression but RUDE and sending all the wrong messages. As I live alone in the country we don't naturally get the kind of exposure to dogs that we need so I drive 30 minutes (one way) to a small city where there is a terrific park with lots of space to work at a distance with really good owners who keep their dogs on leash. However, he is excited from the get go and especially when he sees a dog. When we're walking our country road, the woods & fields, we are clearly together and in synch and it is such a joy. But in an environment with dogs his excitement just escalates and he is hardly aware of me at all - he goes into drive! After a year of working on this I am getting so discouraged with my inability to manage this.
I wish I knew this with my dog earlier with m excuse. He gets over aroused guickly. Everyone gave the advice you talked about. This made him worse. Love your videos recallers,crate. Games. This information is helpful. You always give valuable information that works.
Get up early and take your dog for exercise, an hour, and a half. Take your dog again in the evening, use open spaces and take a couple of toys for the dog to fetch. Your dog will quieten down and you will feel fitter.
yah will retire after 15 yearsl
Thank you 😊
My dog is like that. She is calm when walking on the routes which she get used to. But when I take her to the new environments, she is excited and distracted by everything.
This is extreeemely helpful ❤❤❤
Thank you so much for this!
I have a rescue Lab/Staffy that sometimes acts like an "overly aroused" dog.. She might spin in circles, and she jumps on people when our company arrives. I was thinking that she was spinning as a way of "acting out" for not getting her way on a walk.. But your description now makes a LOT of sense to me. There are times my rescue lunges, spins and VERY occasional (when she had not has enough sleep and rest) may nip .I have found that if she goes into spinning mode I can stop our walk, caress her physically and talk to her gently and softly I can usually calm her down enough to continue our walk.Lunging at strangers is also an issue in the past and mainly when she gets "startled" suddenly by a loud vehicle racing by us on our walk, a fast biker or fast jogging dog. This was a very inciteful and helpful video for me Thank you!.
Thanks for your help information ! This video was perfect for me, because I was feeling so overwhelmed by my puppy! 👍 you’re a life saver 😊
I have a couple of dog sisters, and one is bossy and excitable. They both wrestle and play and often get along well. They also often break into fights. The excitable one usually starts them, but not always. Anyways, I've noticed that if I get after the excitable one when she's on top in a fight, either to pull her off, or maybe spray water on her trying to break up the fight, it just gets her more crazy and makes it worse. I'm finding better ways to handle (and prevent) their fights, but that was an eye opener for me to see that.
You made me cry, by say please respect who your dog is. Xxxxx love you. Would love to try with you. X
Our dog is unlike any dog we've ever had or known. She is a blend of 4 kinds of shepherds...one being an Australian .
Scout is a little over 6 1/2 yrs. old. We live on a busy street. Seems like she should be used to traffic & people walking by our house after living here all of her life (except first 8 weeks). People walk by our house every single day. She will bark because she hears someone walking by. She'll bark because cars/trucks are stopped in front of our house because traffic is backed up because of a train. If UPS, FED EX, Amazon makes a delivery , she barks. When I stand up to see about the delivery, the barking gets more frenzied along w/bouncing & moving around quickly.
We can't keep her away from triggers. She over-reacts just because I come downstairs or just because I stand up.
We take her w/us in the car often. She's great in the car! She's quiet. But when we arrive home, she over-reacts.She barks & runs around. What calms her down is to have her go in our living room & I close the gate which we have separating it from the dining room. This lets us do whatever we need to do upon arriving home w/out a dog under our feet, barking.
Scout has a very sweet nature, not a mean bone in her body. And she is smart! I love her dearly. I love her enthusiasm. The barking, tho, is especially a problem because my husband suffers from misophonia which is triggered by Scout's bark !
Hi Pat, thank you for wanting to help Scout. Here's are two resources for you to consider with these challenges in mind to turn things around.
The first is our playlist on creating calm - ruclips.net/p/PLphRRSxcMHy3KQXSC-3IzEdBgBetrl2YP
We also have a video to help you with everything that she is reacting to outside - ruclips.net/video/62V-3JsHKvE/видео.html
I wish I found this vid sooner. Our 3 year old doggo gets over-excited super easily & it's a behaviour I've never dealt with before. It's been hard to find resources that really address the ins & outs of the associated behaviours & what to do about it
We're glad you found the video helpful, please give the training a try and share how you and your dog are doing ❤️
Thank you so much. You don't understand how much this helps us!
Amazing information! Thank you
This is freaking amazing, you have been such a help to my understanding my dogs will benefit!!
We are so glad you found us! Thank you for wanting to do the best you can for your dogs
Big thank you - will said & explained! First time & subscribed!!!
Susan you're amazing! thats story of my life these days with my 10 month old adolescent beagle. she's calm as a clam most of the time but when outside in unfamiliar places it has been difficult... i wish you can come to Switzerland to help me with my dog! 😆
Its never the dogs fault unless there is a sickness. There is no bad dog or bad child. Its on the parent and owner to learn the correct techniques and apply them assertively
I cannot say how much I love these podcasts! Xxxxxx
Great video!!!
SO happy to have found you! I have a rescue labs after having labs and I needed this podcast to figure out her triggers. Thanks!!!
We're glad it was helpful, please come back to let us know how your training is going! 💕
@@DogsThat bite
@@DogsThat bite
Help
We're getting there with over arousal and managing it. As always so good to have the reminders of great games and acceptance. Thanks Susan.
I LOVE your videos and the simple way you explain things. So fun, encouraging and helpfull! Really, the best dog-training videos on RUclips. Thank you so much for what are you doing!
Wow, thank you, Lina!
You make sense. I made a mistake of not fully training my first dog I ever owned before I brought her brother home when she was 1 yrs old. On top of that whopper, these are my first dogs ever and I am 55yrs old! BIG mistake. Mistake #3: I live way out in the country, so my dogs are not socialized so when the see another human, I don't exist, LoL! I trained them to do all kinds of fun tricks, but when I take them to town (rarely) they lose it, but I know it's my fault. I recognized their behavior is my fault before seeing this video. I started removing them from the people and new stimulus far enough that they can see it, but I was the leader again. They weren't perfect when I took them in where the commotion is, but so much more relaxed and comfortable with it. Work in progress, but I don't go in town a lot and the neighbors are getting redundant. They say hiya and go on to their business of sitting on me. (Golden Retrievers)
Hi Tee, for sure you can still rain your dog ❤️ Here's a podcast on socialization Susan did a while back: ruclips.net/video/av4caEeC-7k/видео.html
Thank you Susan. Again, my experience with my 2,9 Belgian shepherd reinforces the truth in your instructions… I take him to run in the woods, he runs for 1,5 hours and when we come back he is still over excited with the dogs neighbours…. Does not listen to commands… does whatever he wants…. I am tired!
Super Great! A lot of people don't get it. Sometimes I don't. My BC is so different from my one before him. This one is soooo dominating. But ultimately, it comes down to a connection between him and I. He is 2 1/2. He was so crazy I couldn't even get an eye contact for his first year. So I did nothing. Once I got eye contact, we started a relationship. Maybe that is wrong but we got things going on now. He is so smart, he knows what I'm asking for. I know what he is asking for. The basic commands are pretty funny at this point. We know where we are. A look at each other and we both know what's up. Also, he is only 2 1/2 and we are a year behind. And I do still get bit when he doesn't like something. Ya, cuz ya know, he is very dominant. SUPER ALPHA. But thank you for not just putting a breed in a box. And I'm good with the Alpha, cuz his feelings matter. And I hate whimsy ankle biters! 😂😂
Ty.
Thanks again for a wonderful session!😊 So appreciate the information.
2:51
3:21 over aroused dog
4:55 over calmed dog
11:14 too many carbs
12:27 over socialised
14:41 people pleaser stress
16:04 training owners
18:27 to 19:14 where we start
I love this! Thank you! ❤.. I need to work on more of those calm collar grabs!….. just so you know.. “Netflix and chill” does NOT mean relax😅, you may want to look that up before using that as the calming scenario.. to many, it’s a very arousing situation ;)
I guess im weird bc i love when my dog is excited!!!
I'm learning and laughing because I have one who is a over happy dog and one who could care less about anything or any body.
Minus the herding breed, she described my 11yr mini labradoodle. He would send shrill waves throughout the neighborhood when we'd go for walks. Recently, he came down with diabetes his voice isn't the same. 😢
Funny how I totally expected my Greyhound puppy to lean towards fearfull, timid and low-drive/energy, so I watched a bunch of video's to prepare myself for that before he came home. Only to now binge all video's on over-arousal, high-drive and reactivity because the puppy turned out to be over confident, highly play driven and quickly aroused! 😁❤
The good news is you can work on either of those and help your pup ❤️
Here's a playlist with resources for you: ruclips.net/video/06CyHsE-bEY/видео.html&pp=gAQBiAQB
Love how she uses meditation and breath.
Tons of superb and valuable info and great for an audio book but I expect more from You Tube. I need a bit more of the demonstration aspect.
Herding dogs need a job. I found if my Aussie puppy has to be on a leash he is much much calmer on a walk if he has a purpose. I have him on a long line (50ft) and we do nose work, parkour, swimming or throwing a chuckit stick which we can also play tug with. I practice recall and other obedience as well. It all seems to all gel together and he is having fun. When he is in his zone he does not pay any attention to other dogs or people. When we get home we both feel satisfied, relaxed and happy. It has take 4 months and a lot of diligent work to get to this point - he is 6 months now. We still have long journey but there is light at the end of the tunnel. All of my other 15 dogs in 35 years have been so easy going that i had never even heard of over arousal in dogs until my Aussie.
If we are at the dog park I do obedience and chuck kibble for him to focus on. We know almost all the people and dogs in my small community dog park so he sees them everyday they are used to playing so it is not a novelty. If he does get too excited playing with the other dogs I take him to the dog beach and when he sinks into the water, I can almost hear a whoosh as he relaxes. I have plastic pool in the backyard for all the dogs but he is the only one that just likes to relax in it. I feel it is his version of a hot tub. I am getting him used our spa tub for winter and he loves the bubbles.
I love the idea of massage do you have any videos for that?
He has chosen the brick fireplace hearth as his go to place and all the dogs get a beef cheek in their respective chosen places after a big play. I get a coffee and just enjoy the peace.
😂 parents can use all of this advice with their children too😉
@wendy4ronpaul,
OMG! You should see the looks I get when I tell people there's not that much of a difference between training a child or an animal. 😱😛🐾🐾🐕 💖🙌😺
It’s true ..
That was the first thing I thought of lol
@@debracisneroshhp2827 THERE IS A DIFFERENCE. Babies don't bark, they don't breed, babies don't have periods. And babies are not ANIMALS. You're disgusting. I don't trust nuts, gives me Hitler vibes 😂😂😂 disgusting 🤢🤢
Blessings to you your family and friends and associates and dogs😉✌️💕
Omg,your amazing !!❤
Wow. You knowledge and methods are just what I need and makes sense to me. Thank you for sharing your invaluable wisdom with all dog lovers.
I didn't see the whole video yet, but I have to say your better than Zak George. You explain things better and talk to other trainers
We're glad you're finding it useful, please lets us know how your training goes ❤️
Susan, this episode (and the few before it) seems to be tailored made to help with our newest rescue dog, Tundra, who's been with us for two months now. The best thing with these podcasts, is my wife will actually watch them and pick things up. She's had no interest in Recallers with Boris (my other dog), but is seeing how it can help Tundra along with these podcast episodes, and is learning the games now as well.
Tundra is a 17-month old, poorly socialized and very reactive puppy who spent six months in a shelter before we rescued her. Given a chance to calm down, Tundra is a very affectionate and gentle dog. She made friends with our other dog, Boris, very quickly, and is picking up her Recallers training rapidly.
Your timing to release these latest episodes is perfect. The reactive dog playlist of episodes you've assembled have already been very useful, and these latest new ones are just adding to information I need for Tundra's training plan. She gets very over-aroused around moving cars, strangers, and unfamiliar dogs. Those are her primary triggers, and they're very hard to avoid where we live! People and cars are coming along slowly, but other dogs is going to need a lot of "Netflix and Chill" time (when the weather gets better, and key behaviors are more solid). Tundra is already solid with a head halter, and is better at IYC than Boris already.
Brent, you are doing great with Tundra and Boris is a wonderful role model, as are you!
Thank you, my dog was in a kennel without 50 l. I mean, dogs everywhere, mama's everywhere. And they were but in any way trained. I believe he is over excited because of this over socialized. As you say, I will try some other things now, thank you.